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South Sudan is the world's youngest country, and it has witnessed immense change since gaining independence in 2011. The promise of peace has given way to civil war, and tribal rifts continue to run deep, permeating political affairs. Over two million people have been displaced and tens of thousands killed.
Amid the tumult is the Mundari, a people who would rather get on with doing what they do best: looking after their cattle.
These cows grow up to eight feet tall,
and are worth as much as $500 each. It's no wonder the Mundari view
these animals as their most valuable assets (or that they guard them
with with machine guns).
Photographer Tariq Zaidi
spent a fortnight earlier this year documenting their lives and the
devotion they show towards these animals. Zaidi has captured tribes and
indigenous people from over 30 African nations, though he was
nonetheless taken aback by the relationship between man and beast.
"It's hard to overstate the importance of cattle to the Mundari people," says Zaidi, "these animals are everything to them."
The
photographer describes how "almost every man I met wanted me to take a
picture of them with their favorite cow." Their wives and children, on
the other hand, were given short shrift.
Perhaps this is in part due to the
function and symbolism of the Ankole-Watusi. Each bovine is so highly
prized that it is rarely killed for its meat. Instead, it is a walking
larder, a pharmacy, a dowry, even a friend. It is clear that cow is a
resource maintaining not just a people, but a way of life.
The
Mundari, tall and muscular, may "look like bodybuilders," says Zaidi,
"but their diet is pretty much milk and yogurt. That's it." Other bodily
fluids have more unlikely uses. Mundari men will squat under streams of
cow urine, both an antiseptic, Zaidi suggests, and as an aesthetic
choice -- the ammonia in the urine color the Mundari's hair orange.
Meanwhile
dung is piled high into heaps for burning, the fine peach-colored ash
used as another form of antiseptic and sunscreen by the herdsmen,
shielding them from the 115-degree heat.
The cows, adds Zaidi, are among the world's most pampered. He says he
witnessed Mundari massaging their animals twice a day. The ash from dung
fires, as fine as talcum powder, is rubbed into the cattle's skin and
used as bedding, while ornamental tassels swat flies from the eyes of
the herd's most prestigious beasts.
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